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Microsoft The Almighty Buck IT Technology

Microsoft Launches Decentralized Identity Tool on Bitcoin Blockchain (coindesk.com) 38

Microsoft is launching the first decentralized infrastructure implementation by a major tech company that is built directly on the bitcoin blockchain. From a report: The open source project, called Ion, deals with the underlying mechanics of how networks talk to each other. For example, if you log onto Airbnb using Facebook, a protocol deals with the software that sends the personal information from your social profile to that external service provider. In this case, Ion handles the decentralized identifiers, which control the ability to prove you own the keys to this data.

Christopher Allen, a crypto veteran and the co-founder of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) working group for decentralized identity (DID) solutions, told CoinDesk that Microsoft's move could impact the entire tech industry. "A lot of enterprise infrastructures use Microsoft products," Allen said. "So if they integrate this into any of their infrastructure products, they'll have access to DID." Indeed, Yorke Rhodes, a program manager on Microsoft's blockchain engineering team, told CoinDesk that Microsoft's team has been working for a year on a key signing and validation software that relies on public networks, like bitcoin or ethereum, yet can handle far greater throughput than the underlying blockchain itself.

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Microsoft Launches Decentralized Identity Tool on Bitcoin Blockchain

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  • No thanks (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Embrace, extend, extinguish.

    Never forget

    • Microsoft is including a Linux subsystem in Windows. (Their claimed POSIX support was kind of a joke.)
  • I don't see a link to the announcement.

  • by QuietLagoon ( 813062 ) on Thursday May 16, 2019 @04:09PM (#58604626)
    ... with Microsoft collecting personal data about the user from the sites that use this identity tool. Windows 10 has shown that Microsoft now also appears to be in the personal data collection business.
  • https://opensource.google.com/projects/ion

    Also ANY sort of actual technical detail on how this works and utilizes the blockchain would be good.

  • They are a kind of decentralized identity as well.

  • by Shaitan ( 22585 ) on Thursday May 16, 2019 @04:16PM (#58604674)

    https://bitcoinist.com/microsoft-picks-bitcoin-to-create-a-new-identity-system/

    https://github.com/decentralized-identity/ion

    https://bitcoinist.com/microsoft-buy-github-bitcoin-devs-exit/

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Microsoft seems to be doing all sorts of things. I don't really know what they are doing.

    I can tell you what they are not doing.

    Microsoft is NOT securing the Office 365 platform which is a festering cesspool of phished accounts spewing spam and as well as proliferating phishing and ransomware delivery.

    Perhaps Microsoft could stop doing all the things as start cleaning up their shit?

  • ... 51% attacks?

    • Not in a few years at least.. What is there to think about it?

      If it were a real problem, someone would be using it in the last 10 years to steal some of the now $140 billion of Bitcoin's market cap.

      You sound like someone that read something once about a theoretical hole in Bitcoin's security (one pointed out, and refuted, by it's creator in the original white paper before it was even a working protocol) that just needed to throw their two cents in... even though they're not even worth a couple of Satoshi's.

      • If it were a real problem, someone would be using it in the last 10 years ...

        How about LAST [fortune.com] year?

        Bitcoin Spinoff Hacked in Rare '51% Attack'

  • "decentralized identifiers, which control the ability to prove" - Anyone else noticing a paradox here?

  • The second cryptocurrency in existence, Namecoin, was designed specifically to contain information. It can hold decentralized domain names that can be resolved by an amended DNS, but it also can hold arbitrary data, such as names, and their corresponding signatures, or anything else one might imagine, with an expiry and and a small fee to prevent resource squandering. Like six years ago?
  • Does that mean if my 'identity' (whatever it means) enters the blockchain it will be impossible to remove it from there?

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